mdless
is a utility that provides a formatted and highlighted view of Markdown files in Terminal.
I often use iTerm2 in visor mode, so qlmanage -p
is annoying. I still wanted a way to view Markdown files quickly and without cruft.
- Built in pager functionality with pipe capability,
less
replacement for Markdown files - Format tables
- Colorize Markdown syntax for most elements
- Normalize spacing and link formatting
- Display footnotes after each paragraph
- Inline image display (local, optionally remote) (with compatible tools like imgcat or chafa)
- Syntax highlighting of code blocks when Pygments is installed
- List headlines in document
- Display single section of the document based on headlines
- Configurable Markdown options
- Customizable colors
- Add iTerm marks for h1-3 navigation when pager is disabled
- TaskPaper syntax detection and highlighting
gem install mdless
If you run into errors, try gem install --user-install mdless
, or sudo gem install mdless
(in that order).
mdless is also available via Homebrew (directly).
brew install mdless
To render images, you need imgcat
or chafa
installed (brew install chafa
).
For syntax highlighting, the pygmentize
command must be available, part of the Pygments package (brew install pygments
).
mdless [options] path
or cat [path] | mdless
The pager used is determined by system configuration in this order of preference:
$PAGER
less
more
cat
pager
-c, --[no-]color Colorize output (default on)
-d, --debug LEVEL Level of debug messages to output (1-4, 4 to see all messages)
-h, --help Display this screen
-i, --images=TYPE Include [local|remote (both)|none] images in output (requires chafa or imgcat, default none).
-I, --all-images Include local and remote images in output (requires imgcat or chafa)
-l, --list List headers in document and exit
-p, --[no-]pager Formatted output to pager (default on)
-P Disable pager (same as --no-pager)
-s, --section=NUMBER[,NUMBER] Output only a headline-based section of the input (numeric from --list)
-t, --theme=THEME_NAME Specify an alternate color theme to load
-@, --at_tags Highlight @tags and values in the document
-v, --version Display version number
-w, --width=COLUMNS Column width to format for (default: terminal width)
--[no-]autolink Convert bare URLs and emails to <links>
--[no-]inline_footnotes Display footnotes immediately after the paragraph that references them
--[no-]intra-emphasis Parse emphasis inside of words (e.g. Mark_down_)
--[no-]lax-spacing Allow lax spacing
--links=FORMAT Link style ([inline, reference, paragraph], default inline,
"paragraph" will position reference links after each paragraph)
--[no-]linebreaks Preserve line breaks
--[no-]syntax Syntax highlight code blocks
--taskpaper=OPTION Highlight TaskPaper format (true|false|auto)
--update_config Update the configuration file with new keys and current command line options
--[no-]wiki-links Highlight [[wiki links]]
The first time mdless is run, a config file will be written to ~/.config/mdless/config.yml
, based on the command line options used on the first run. Update that file to make any options permanent (config options will always be overridden by command line flags).
---
:at_tags: true
:autolink: true
:color: true
:inline_footnotes: true
:intra_emphasis: false
:lax_spacing: true
:links: :paragraph
:local_images: true
:pager: true
:preserve_linebreaks: false
:remote_images: false
:syntax_higlight: true
:taskpaper: :auto
:theme: default
:width: 120
:wiki_links: true
- The
:at_tags
setting determines whether @tags will be highlighted. If this is enabled, colors will be pulled from theat_tags
settings in the theme. :autolink
will determine whether bare urls are turned into<self-linking>
urls.:color
will enable or disable all coloring.:inline_footnotes
will determine the placement of footnotes. If true, footnotes will be added directly after the element that refers to them.:intra_emphasis
will determine whether words containing underscores are rendered as italics or not.:lax_spacing
determines whether a blank line is required around HTML elements.:links
can beinline
,reference
, orparagraph
. Paragraph puts reference links directly after the graf that refers to them.:local_images
determines whether local images are processed usingchafa
orimgcat
(whichever is available).:remote_images
does the same for images referenced with web urls. If:remote_images
is true, then:local_images
is automatically enabled.:pager
turns on or off pagination usingless
or closest available substitute.:preserve_linebreaks
determines whether hard breaks within paragraphs are preserved. When converting to HTML, most Markdown processors will cause consecutive lines to be merged together, which is the default behavior formdless
. Turning this option on will cause lines to remain hard wrapped.:syntax_highlight
will turn on/off syntax highlighting of code blocks (requires Pygments):taskpaper
determines whether a file is rendered as a TaskPaper document. This can be set to:auto
to have TaskPaper detected from extension or content.:theme
allows you to specify an alternate theme. See Customization below.:width
allows you to permanantly set a width for wrapping of lines. If the width specified is greater than the available columns of the display, the display columns will be used instead.:wiki_links
determines whether[[wiki links]]
will be highlighted. If highlighted, colors are pulled from thelink
section of the theme.
On first run a default theme file will be placed in ~/.config/mdless/mdless.theme
. You can edit this file to modify the colors mdless uses when highlighting your files. You can copy this file and create multiple theme options which can be specified with the -t NAME
option. For example, create ~/.config/mdless/brett.theme
and then call mdless -t brett filename.md
.
Colors are limited to basic ANSI codes, with support for bold, underline, italics (if available for the terminal/font), dark and bright, and foreground and background colors.
Customizeable settings are stored in YAML format. A chunk of the settings file looks like this:
h1:
color: b intense_black on_white
pad: d black on_white
pad_char: "="
Font and color settings are set using a string of color names and modifiers. A typical string looks like b red on_white
, which would give you a bold red font on a white background. In the YAML settings file there's no need for quotes, just put the string following the colon for the setting.
You can also use 3 or 6-digit hex codes in place of color names. These can be prefixed with bg
or on_
to affect background colors, e.g. bgFF0ACC
. The codes are case-insensitive and can be combined with emphasis modifiers like b
or u
.
Some extra (non-color) settings are available for certain keys, e.g. pad_char
to define the right padding character used on level 1 and 2 headlines. Note that you can change the Pygments theme used for syntax highlighting with the code_block.pygments_theme setting. For a list of available styles (assuming you have Pygments installed), use pygmentize -L styles
.
The display of characters around emphasis and code spans can be configured. By default, the surrounding character for bold is **
, italic is _
, and code span is a backtick. You can leave these keys empty to not display characters at all. For triple-emphasized text, the text will be surrounded by italic and bold characters, in that order.
emphasis:
bold: b
bold_character: "**"
italic: u i
italic_character: ""
bold-italic: b u i
code_span:
marker: b white
color: b white on_intense_black
character: ""
Note: the ANSI escape codes are reset every time the color changes, so, for example, if you have a key that defines underlines for the url in a link, the underline will automatically be removed when it gets to a bracket. This also means that if you define a background color, you'll need to define it again on all the keys that it should affect.
Base colors:
- black
- red
- green
- yellow
- blue
- magenta
- cyan
- white
Emphasis:
- b (bold)
- d (dark)
- i (italic)
- u (underline)
- r (reverse, negative)
To modify the emphasis, use 'b' (bold), 'i' (italic), 'u' (underline), e.g. u yellow
for underlined yellow. These can be combined, e.g. b u red
.
Use 'r' to reverse foreground and background colors. r white on_black
would display as black on_white
. 'r' alone will reverse the current color set for a line.
To set a background color, use on_[color]
with one of the 8 colors. This can be used with foreground colors in the same setting, e.g. white on_black
.
Use 'd' (dark) to indicate the darker version of a foreground color. On macOS (and possibly other systems) you can use the brighter version of a color by prefixing with "intense", e.g. intense_red
or on_intense_black
.
Ranger is a file manager that allows for quick navigation in the file hierarchy. A preview can be displayed for various file types. See docs at https://github.com/ranger/ranger/wiki.
mdless can be used in Ranger to preview Markdown and Taskpaper.
Ranger is installed with brew install ranger
.
With ranger --copy-config=scope
the configuration file for previews scope.sh
is created in the directory ~/.config/ranger
.
The configuration file is already preconfigured. The following can be inserted above html to use mdless.
## Markdown
md|taskpaper)
mdless --taskpaper=auto -@ "${FILE_PATH}" && exit 5
;;
Thanks to Ralf Hülsmann for contributing!
Gather is a tool for converting web pages to Markdown. You can use it with mdless to create a Lynx-style web browser:
$ gather https://brettterpstra.com/projects/gather-cli/ | mdless
fzf is a tool for selecting files and other menu options with typeahead fuzzy matching. You can set up mdless
as a previewer when selecting Markdown or TaskPaper files.
$ ls *.md | fzf --preview 'mdless {}'
You can replace the cat command in Fish by creating the following functions in ~/.config/fish/functions
get_ext.fish
function get_ext -d 'Get the file extension from the argument'
set -l splits (string split "." $argv)
echo $splits[-1]
end
cat.fish
function cat -d "Use bat instead of cat unless it's a Markdown file, then use mdless"
set -l exts md markdown txt taskpaper
if not test -f $argv[-1]
echo "File not found: $argv[-1]"
return 0
end
if contains (get_ext $argv[-1]) $exts
mdless $argv
else
command bat --style plain --theme OneHalfDark $argv
end
end
Note that if you do this, and you need uncolored output to pipe somewhere, you'll need to use command cat FILE
to revert to the built-in cat
. Otherwise your text will be full of the escape codes that mdless
uses to colorize the output.
There are a few great options for Markdown viewing in the Terminal. If mdless
doesn't do it for you, check out: